Charism

" This is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent. (John 17,3)."

Wednesday, 25 March 2020

COVOD-19 PANDEMIC: A THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE BY Cl. ROBERT MARWEIN, SDS

COVOD-19 PANDEMIC: A THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE 


INTRODUCTION
The Covid-19 virus also known as Coronavirus is labeled as one of the deadliest diseases of all time. There are hundreds and thousands of people that have been infected and die daily from Covid-19, and it has caused a tremendous global crisis. Currently there is no vaccine or cure for the disease. Some people perceive Covid-19 as a blessing in disguise; some perceive it as a curse, but the majority of the people perceive it as an evil which interlinks into the area of human suffering. Suffering is inevitable, but too much suffering often gives rise to one of the age-old questions, where is God in suffering?
THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
It is true that many people wonder if God causes Covid-19. Is Covid-19 God’s judgment? How can a loving God allow so many people to be infected and die from Covid-19? These questions have drawn the attention of many elite personalities to recount the place of God in this pandemic disease. Too many people believe that Covid-19 is God’s punishment for the sins of humanity. A closer look at this theory recalls the doctrine of ‘Divine Justice and Retribution,’ that God rewards the just and punishes the wicked (Deut 11:26-28, 27-28, Ezek 18:26-27; Luke 5:20). The book of Job casts the same pattern as the three friends of Job claim that Job must have sinned, hence he suffers (Job xx:xx).  Literally, they reversed the truth of the Bible that both obedience and sin have appropriate results (Deut. 28). By reversing the cause and effect, they were saying that all suffering is explained by sin. This is a faulty reasoning, an over reading and a mechanical application of a proper biblical Retribution TheologyTheir problem is that they applied rigidly the doctrine to Job without considering that he could be innocent. They did not speak to God; they did not have any personal language with God.[1] In another words, their problem is that they remained only in a rational activity based on reason alone, but failed to understand God’s words and action revealed in human history for the salvation of humankind.
In the Gospel of Luke 13:1-4, people asked Jesus about the reports of death of the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices; Jesus answered them that the people who died were not more deserving of death than others. One cannot argue from sudden and violent death to the enormity of sin.[2]
However, we cannot speak of God’s Justice and retribution without speaking of God’s Mercy. God’s Justice and Mercy cannot enter into noble conflict with each other. In Justice God condemns us and in Mercy God redeems us (Matt 18:23-35; John 3:16; 1 John 3:16; 1 Tim 2:1-6). Mercy is the expression of love. God loves us and thus he chooses to show us mercy. Love conditions justice.
Pope Francis in his apostolic letter ‘Misericordia et Misera’ recounts the story of Jesus meeting with the woman caught in adultery (John 8:1-11). He, emphasizes that God’s love must take primacy over all else. Again he says that the Gospel account is not an encounter of sin and judgment in the abstract, but a sinner and her savior. Jesus looked that woman in the eye and read in her heart a desire to be understood, forgiven and free. The misery of sin was clothed with the mercy of love. Jesus’ only judgment is one filled with mercy and compassion for the condition of this sinner.[3]
Therefore, during this pandemic the world needs to listen to God in silence, to realize that humans are mere mortals, and there is no one just before God, “can mortal be righteous before God? …even in his servants he puts no trust, and his angels he charges with error; how much more those who live in houses of clay, whose foundation is in the dust, who are crushed like a moth” (Job 4:17-19). Human beings need to live with faith in God, and acknowledge the great mystery of God’s sovereignty together with the prayers and praises.  People need to invite God to come to their aid because he has promised that he will always come (Rev 3:20).
During his suffering, Job lamented, but his faith was unshaken (Job 17; 19:25) because he knew that his redeemer lives (Job 19:25-27). Like Job, Jesus lamented on the cross when he cried out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mark 15:xx; cf. Ps 22:1), Jesus did not lament because he doubted God, Rather, he expressed his deepest faith in God. Jesus Christ is the true innocent sufferer (Isa 42). But Jesus death on the cross appears to be as much a punishment for sin. By suffering for us he provided us with an example for our imitation (1 Pet 2:21; Matt 16:24; Luke 14:27), and if we follow it, life and death are made holy and take on a new meaning. However, Jesus’ death on the cross did not bring suffering to an end. He does not even save himself on the cross. Instead, Jesus descends deep into the humanity to share it with us for love’s sake.
CONCLUSION
It is quite normal when people are actually suffering, appears to be drawn closer to God. Frequently during a time of crisis like the pandemic of Covid-19, the doctrine of Divine Justice and Retribution is invoked. We cannot attribute to God as the cause of Covid-19. Benedict XVI pointed out that humanity today no longer feel the need to justify themselves to God but instead thought God needed to justify himself to humanity due to suffering in the world. God is in heaven and we are on earth… (Ps 119:3). God’s thoughts are not our thoughts, and neither are His ways our ways (Isa 55:8). But like Job and Jesus, we lament to God and hold on in silence, each one must look at one’s self, accept our mortality, and the mystery of God’s way, imitate Jesus and surrender to God in faith, because the mercy of God overcome suffering and judgment, “where sin abounds, grace abounds all the more (Rom 5:20).”
[1] Cf. L. Rambau, “Wisdom Literature,” Class Notes.
[2] Cf. D.J. Harrington, the Gospel of Luke, Sacra Pagina 3, 210.
[3] Cf. Francis, Misericordia et Misera, Art. No. 1.


Friday, 20 March 2020

NEW LEADERSHIP OF TANZANIAN PRO-PROVINCE 2020 (BY CL. JOHN W. NSENYE, SDS)


T he New Tanzanian Pro - Province
Provincial Council

NEW LEADERSHIP OF TANZANIAN PRO-PROVINCE 2020


PROVINCIAL CHAPTER JANUARY 2020
The Tanzanian Pro-province had an Ordinary provincial Chapter from 7th to 9th of January in 2020. This was to fulfill a Tanzanian statutes that demands an ordinary Provincial Chapter to meet once for every three years (Cf. Tanzanian Statutes 705).  The Provincial Chapter began on 7th of January after the delegates who most of them arrived on 6th January, the meeting persisted for three days Tuesday of 7th, Wednesday of 8th and Thursday of 9th January 2020.

ELECTION OF THE NEW PROVINCIAL SUPERIOR
On the second day of the provincial Chapter there was an Agendum of the Election of the Provincial Superior. In this election there were three candidates for the provincial position who were approved by the general Council (Generalate);

Ø Rev. Fr. Ponder Paulinus Ngilangwa, SDS
Ø Rev. Fr. Michael Siya Tesha, SDS
Ø Rev. Fr. Sentus Dikwe, SDS

Among the three candidates Rev. Fr. Michael Siya Tesha, SDS was elected to be the Provincial superior.




ELECTION OF THE PROVINCIAL COUNCIL
On the third and last day of the Provincial chapter there was an Agendum of electing the Provincial Vicar and the other provincial council members. After the provincial superior have been elected, he was given a chance of proposing the four people who will be in the leadership for three years as provincial councils. After the elected provincial superior have proposed the names the delegates of the chapter voted for or against. The elected members of the council were the following.

THE NAME OF THE PROVINCIAL COUNCIL MEMBER
POSITION
REV. DR. EVODIUS MBENA, SDS
VICAR PROVINCIAL
BR. SYLIVESTER CHIMOTO, SDS
CONSULTOR
FR. EUGINE RESLINSKI
CONSULTOR
FR. CHRISTOPHER LUOGA, SDS
CONSULTOR


THE NEW PROVINCIAL TREASURER
The new elected provincial Superior appointed REV. FR. CHRISTOPHER LUOGA, SDS to be the Provincial Treasurer and he presented this name to the delegates of the chapter. The delegates of the chapter approved the name by the YES or NO vote; hence the Rev. Fr. Christopher Luoga, SDS was elected as the Provincial Treasurer for this new leadership of the Tanzanian Pro-Province.

Recommendations about Mater Salvatoris Scholasticate Formation house
The Tanzanian Provincial Chapter 2020 recommended to the Provincial and his council that, with the help of the secretary of formation from generalate to help in improving the formation system at Mater Salvatoris International Formation Scholasticate House- Morogoro, they have to put a special eye on matters of LITURGY, SALVATORIAN LIFE, HOME LIVE FOR THE SCHOLASTICS and more to establish apostolate to the Scholastics especially on Saturday and Sunday.

THE HANDING OVER OF THE LEADERSHIP (OFFICE)

A picture showing handing over of the office From Right hand are Very Rev. Dr. Tesha SDS the new elected Provincial Superior, Fr. Maganga the outgoing Vicar Provincial, Fr. Eugine SDS Consultor and Fr. Ponder SDS the outgoing Provincial Superior


Handing over of Provincial Office at Masasi

The handing over of the Provincial leadership was done in March, 9th 2020 at Migongo-Masasi the headquarters of the Tanzanian Pro-Province. The outgoing leadership under the Very Rev. Fr. Ponder Paulinus Ngilangwa, SDS who was the Provincial handed over the office to the New elected Provincial Very Rev. Dr. Michael Siya Tesha, SDS.                                                        

Another picture on the day of handing over of Provincial office at Masasi headquarters of the Province with the Masasi community members 



THE LENTEN ACTION ON MARCH 2020 (By Frt. John W. Nsenye, SDS)

THE LENTEN ACTION ON MARCH 2020 AT MGOLOLE ORPHANAGE        Mater Salvatoris Scholasticate House has a tradition of going to do Lenten actio...